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WAP on Whole Foods

  
  
  
  
  

The information below is from Sally Fallon Morell, President of the Weston A. Price Foundation.

                                                   Weston A Price, WAP

Dear Members,

The Weston A. Price Foundation has issued the following press release about the "Health Starts Here" low-fat, mostly vegetarian marketing program at Whole Foods Markets.

Please feel free to distribute this press release to your local media.  In addition, you can contact Whole Foods at customer.questions@wholefoods.com to share your experiences with low-fat versus traditional high-fat diets.

Sincerely,
Sally Fallon Morell, President

WHOLE FOODS PROMOTES MILITANT VEGETARIAN AGENDA
Has the Upscale Market Outlived Its Usefulness?

WASHINGTON, DC. February 3, 2010:  Whole Foods Markets has launched a nationwide "Health Starts Here" marketing scheme that endorses a low-fat, vegetarian diet, with promises that the diet will "improve health easily and naturally." The plan promotes the books and private business ventures of Joel Fuhrman, MD, and Rip Esselstyn, both of whom worked with Whole Foods to formulate the new guidelines. Customers now receive a pamphlet urging them to adopt a low-fat, plant-based diet and to cut back or completely eliminate animal foods.  Many Whole Foods stores no longer sell books advocating consumption of meat, eggs and dairy products.

The plan will feature new Aggregate Nutrient Density Index (ANDI) labels for foods in the store; the index is designed to make plant foods to appear "nutrient dense" by favoring various phytonutrients in plants and ignoring many vitamins and minerals essential to health. "Whole Foods has stacked the deck against animal foods by choosing ANDI parameters that do not include a host of key nutrients, such as vitamins A, D and K, DHA, EPA arachidonic acid, taurine, iodine, biotin, pantothenic acid, and vital minerals like sodium, chloride, potassium, sulfur, phosphorus, copper, manganese, boron, molybdenum and chromium," says Sally Fallon Morell, president of the Weston A. Price Foundation. "Many of the phytochemicals that Fuhrman includes in the index he developed for Whole Foods play no essential role in the body and may even be harmful."

"Animal foods like meat, liver, butter, whole milk and eggs contain ten to one hundred times more vitamins and minerals than plant foods," says Fallon Morell. "Plant foods add variety and interest to the human diet but in most circumstances do not qualify as 'nutrient-dense' foods."

"For years before becoming deathly ill, I followed the dietary suggestions in the Whole Foods plan," said Kathryne Pirtle, author of Performance without Pain. "I ate large amounts of organic salads, vegetables and fruits, lots of whole grains, only a little meat and no animal fat. I had chronic pain for twenty-five years on this diet, then acid reflux, then a serious inflammation in my spine followed by chronic diarrhea. Without switching to nutrient-dense animal foods, including eggs, butter and whole dairy products, not only would I have lost my national career as a performing artist, I would have died at forty-five years old! I am not alone in this story of ill health from a low-fat, plant-based diet, which does not supply a person with enough nutrients to be healthy and can be very damaging to the intestinal tract."

"Consumers can send a message about Whole Foods' misinformed scheme by voting with their feet," says Fallon Morell.  "Most major grocery store chains now carry basic organic staples and a larger array of organic fruits and vegetables than Whole Foods markets. And citizens should purchase seasonal produce and their meat, eggs and dairy products directly from farmers engaged in non-toxic and grass-based farming. It's not appropriate for Whole Foods to promote a scheme that has no scientific basis and that bulldozes their customers towards the higher profit items in their stores." The local chapters of the Weston A. Price Foundation help consumers connect with farmers raising animal foods in humane, healthy and ecologically friendly fashion.

"The growing emphasis on plant-based diets deficient in animal protein also serves to promote soy foods as both meat and dairy substitutes," says Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN, author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America's Favorite Health Food.   "Soy is not only one of the top eight allergens but has been linked in more than sixty years of studies to malnutrition, digestive distress, thyroid dysfunction, reproductive disorders including infertility, and even cancer, especially breast cancer."

"Low-fat patients are my most unhealthy patients," says John P. Salerno, MD, a board certified family physician from New York City. "The reason we are spiraling into diabetes and obesity is because of the low-fat concept developed by the U.S government decades ago. Low-fat diets have a low nutrient base, and phytonutrients in vegetables cannot be properly absorbed without fat."

Fallon Morell cites recent studies from Europe showing that low-fat diets promote weight gain in both children and adults, and also contribute to infertility. A meta-analysis published January, 2010 in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found no significant evidence that saturated fat consumption is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease.

"Whole Foods CEO John Mackay has stated that eating animal fats amounts to an addiction. But in fact, animal fats are essential for good health," says Fallon Morell. "The nutrients in animal fats, such as vitamins A, D and K, arachidonic acid, DHA, choline, cholesterol and saturated fat, are critical for brain function. In the misguided war against cholesterol and saturated fat, we have created an epidemic of learning disorders in the young and mental decline in the elderly."

"Perhaps the vegetarian diet has affected the thinking powers of Whole Foods management," says Fallon Morell. "It's time for the stockholders to insist on leadership devoted to increasing customer base, not promoting a personal vegetarian agenda."

Comments about the Whole Foods Health Starts Here scheme can be emailed to
customer.questions@wholefoods.com.

The Weston A. Price Foundation is a 501C3 nutrition education foundation with the mission of disseminating accurate, science-based information on diet and health. Named after nutrition pioneer Weston A. Price, DDS, author of the book, Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, the Washington, DC-based Foundation publishes a quarterly journal for over 12,000 members, supports 400 local chapters worldwide and hosts a yearly conference. The Foundation headquarters phone number is (202) 363-4394, westonaprice.org, info@westonaprice.org.

CONTACT
Kimberly Hartke, Publicist, the Weston A. Price Foundation
703-860-2711, 703-675-5557 press@westonaprice.org

Comments

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! 
 
This is a joke, right?
Posted @ Saturday, February 20, 2010 8:36 AM by char
...What? 
 
Disclosure up front: I am a shopper at Whole Foods, as well as Giant Foods - I buy about 25% of my groceries from WF and the rest from Giant. 
 
I'm not sure but I think almost every single paragraph in this article has something that is outright false in it, mixed in with one or two actual truths that are misrepresented. 
 
To save time I'll only answer the first paragraph: 
 
The first sentence is wrong. WF has indeed started a campaign that uses the phrase "Health Starts Here' which they use throughout their salad bar area. It does cover most of the low fat options, usually the ones with minimal ingredients. However it is not a diet, it's food options; it covers foods that are not vegetarian, such as grilled chicken; and it has never overtly promised anything about "improving health". 
 
The second sentence, as far as I know, is correct - for whatever it's worth. I think, out of my weekly shopping trips in the past six or so months, I seem to recall seeing the books on display above the salad bar. It's subtle; the "health starts here" signs don't mention them; and I've never once been pushed into even looking at them closely enough to read the titles. Besides, I don't understand what's wrong with working with dieticians and nutritionists. 
 
The third sentence is wrong. I have never even SEEN one of these pamphlets and as I said, I shop there on a weekly basis (and sometimes stop off mid-week to pick up a salad for lunch). Never. Not once. I've also never seen any marketing at all that recommends cutting back on or eliminating animal products. You may be talking about the ingredient lists, which list any potential allergens and also make note if a menu item is vegan-friendly. These are information for people who have already made the choice to eliminate animal products, and should not be confused with "militant vegetarianism". 
 
The final sentence may or may not be correct; I don't actually see many books or care to look at them, since I'm there to buy groceries, and I don't see that it makes a huge difference what books a grocery store chooses to sell. 
 
Things only get worse and more misinformed in the following paragraphs, so I'm not going to bother to go on or I'd be here all day, but I will add the following: 
 
Kaayla Daniel (Ph.D) decries the use of soy as both a meat and dairy substitute, mentioning the ill effects it can have on health and thyroid, and also bringing up that it is "one of the top 8 allergens". She fails to mention that dairy is among the top allergens as well, a fact I know because my 6-month-old son is allergic to both soy AND dairy and thus I've had to eliminate both from my diet. Yes, I'm frustrated with the ubiquity of soy products, but the implicit claim that SOY (and plant-based nutrition) is EVIL, and MEAT/DAIRY (and animal-based nutrition) is WHOLESOME is both irresponsible and untrue. 
 
Once again, this entire article is framed with just enough truths to make readers think they don't need to research the lies that make up the bulk of the article.
Posted @ Saturday, February 20, 2010 9:08 AM by RK
this crap must be brought to us by the same morons who want us to believe that universal healthcare available in Europe and Canada is a disaster and doesn't work. I wish it WERE a joke.
Posted @ Saturday, February 20, 2010 9:31 AM by SueWho
Why are you people on this website? Do you even know anything about the Weston A. Price Foundation? If you believe that eating low fat is in the least healthful, may I suggest that you educate yourselves about grass-fed products, meat & dairy, and find out why saturated fat is not the harbinger of death it has been portrayed to be. You can start with Gary Taubes book "Good Calories, Bad Calories." I was the sickest and fatest I've ever been on a vegetarian diet.
Posted @ Wednesday, May 19, 2010 12:55 PM by C. McGinnis
+1 for McGinnis comment. I ate conventional wisdom low fat and healthy whole grains most of my adult life and got fatter and sicker the more strictly I adhered to this way of eating. In February 2010 I stopped eating this way. I stopped eating all grains, sugar and vegetable oils. I feel better now than I have for years. I eat lots of animal fat and meat. The Gary Taubes book and "Primal Blueprint" but Mark Sisson have changed my life. My cholesterol went down 46 points the first 3 months of eating this way. The biggest problem I have now is that most meat producers think they need to cut all the great fats off their meat to get people to buy it. I wish they would leave it on. That is where most of the flavor and nutrients are.
Posted @ Monday, September 06, 2010 2:13 PM by Rebecca
Sorry Sally Fallon - why don't you start your own chain of grocery stores, then you can do whatever you want. The world awaits your entrepreneurial skills. Until then - have you noticed how much meat and seafood is in your average Whole Food store? Talk about *delusional*
Posted @ Friday, May 06, 2011 7:14 PM by Amy
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